Jack Barrington, nominal owner of
Tinandra Downs cattle station on the Gilbert River
in the far north of North Queensland, was riding slowly
over his run, when, as the fierce rays of a blazing
sun, set in a sky of brass, smote upon his head and
shoulders and his labouring stock-horse plodded wearily
homewards over the spongy, sandy soil, the lines of
Barcroft Boake came to his mind, and, after he had
repeated them mentally, he cursed aloud.
“That’s where the dead
men lie! Poor Boake must have thought of this
God-forsaken part of an utterly God-forsaken country,
I think, when he wrote ‘Out where the Dead Men
Lie.’ For I believe that God Almighty has
forgotten it! Oh for rain, rain, rain! Rain
to send the Gilbert down in a howling yellow flood,
and turn this blarsted spinifex waste of scorching
sand and desolation into green grass and
save me and the youngsters from giving it best, and
going under altogether.... Boake knew this cursed
country well.... I wonder if he ever ‘owned’
a station one with a raging drought, a
thundering mortgage, and a worrying and greedy bank
sooling him on to commit suicide, or else provide
rain as side issues.... I don’t suppose
he had a wife and children to leave to the mercy of
the Australian Pastoralists’ Bank. D n
and curse the Australian Pastoralists’ Bank,
and the drought, and this scorching sand and hateful
spinifex and God help the poor cattle!”
He drew rein almost under the shade
of a clump of stunted sandalwood, which had, in good
seasons, been a favourite mustering camp, and looked
about him, and then he passed his hand over his eyes
to shut out for a few moments the melancholy spectacle
before him.
I have said that he pulled up “almost”
under shelter; further he could not advance, for the
hard, parched ground immediately under the shade of
the sandalwoods was thickly covered by the stiffened
sun-dried carcasses of some hundreds of dead cattle,
which, having become too weak to leave the sheltering
trees in search of food and water had lain down and
died. Beyond, scattered singly and about in twos
and threes, were the remains of scores of other wretched
beasts, which, unable to drag themselves either to
the sandy river-bed or to the scanty shade of the stunted
timber, had perished where they fell.
With a heavy sigh Harrington dismounted,
took off his water-bag from the saddle, and pouring
a little water into his hat, gave his horse a drink.
Then he drank a few mouthfuls himself, filled and lit
his pipe, and sat down, to rest awhile until the sun
had lost its fierce intensity and think.
And he thought despairingly of the
black prospect which for the past six or seven months
had tormented him by day, and haunted him at night,
broken now and then with a gleam of hope when the pitiless
blue of the sky changed to grey, and rain seemed near,
only to be followed by renewed and bitter disappointment.
“It cannot last much longer,”
he thought; “even if rain came within a week
the rest of the poor brutes left alive will be too
weak to recover and there’s not hands
enough on the station to cut leaves for them.
Even the blacks have cleared out lower down the river...
found a good water-hole I daresay, and, like wise
niggers, are camping there. Why doesn’t
Providence give a poor honest bullock as much show
for his life in a drought as a damned, filthy blackfellow!
Instead of hoofs in this part of the country
at any rate cattle ought to have feet like
a bandicoot, then the poor beasts could worry along
by digging waterholes in the river bed.”
Then, sick at heart as he was, a faint
smile flitted over his sun-bronzed face at the fancy.
An hour passed, and Harrington, with
another weary sigh, rose and saddled his horse one
of the few now remaining to him and able to carry
a rider. Five miles away from the sandalwood camp
was another and larger patch of timber tall,
slender brigalows, which grew on the edge of a dried-up
swamp, once the haunt and breeding place of countless
thousands of wild duck, teal, and geese. This
was another of the mustering camps on Tinandra, and
as it lay on his way home, he decided to go there and
see if any of the “Big Swamp” cattle were
still alive. As he rode slowly over towards the
fringe of timber, the westering sun turned from a
dazzling, blinding gold to a gradually deepening red;
and his sweating horse gave a snort of satisfaction
as the soft, spongy, and sandy spinifex country was
left behind, and the creature’s hoofs struck
upon the hard sun-baked plain of yellow earth which
lay between the two camps. Looking down at the
great, widely spreading cracks in the hungry soil,
the result of a seven-months’ continuous drought,
Harrington almost unconsciously bent his head and
thought that surely God would send rain. He was
not a religious man in the conventional sense he
had never been inside a church in his life but
the memory of his dead mother’s belief in God’s
mercy and goodness was still strong within him.
The brigalow scrub was about half
a mile in length, and stood between the swamp and
the high river bank. At the dried-up bed of the
swamp itself he did not care to look a second time;
its once reedy margin was now a sight of horror, for
many hundreds of cattle had been bogged there long
months before, as they had striven to get further out
to the centre where there was yet left a little water,
saved from evaporation by the broad leaves of the
blue water-lilies.
Skirting the inner edge of the scrub
till he reached its centre, he looked carefully among
the timber, but not a beast was to be seen; then dismounting
he led his horse through, came out upon the river bank,
and looked across the wide expanse of almost burning
sand which stretched from bank to bank, unbroken in
its desolation except by a few ti-trees whose roots,
deep down, kept them alive.
“Bob, old fellow,” he
said to his horse, “we’ve another ten miles
to go, and there’s no use in killing ourselves.
I think that we can put in half an hour digging sand,
and manage to raise a drink down there in the river
bed.”
Still leading the animal, which seemed
to know his master’s intention, Harrington walked
down the sloping bank, his long riding-boots sinking
deeply into the fine, sandy soil, and Bob pricked up
his ears and gave a true stock-horse sigh of weariness
and anticipation combined.
On the opposite side of the river
bed and close under the bank were growing two or three
heavy ti-trees, and here, just as the sun had set,
he halted, again unsaddled, and after lighting a fire,
began to scoop out a hole with his quart pot in between
the roots of the trees. For some minutes he worked
on with energy, then he stopped and listened, and
Bob, too, turned his head inquiringly, for he also
had heard the sound it was only the cry
of a beast, but it seemed so near that Harrington
ceased his digging and stood up to look.
Not a hundred yards distant he saw,
by the light of the now brightly blazing fire, four
gaunt steers and a skeleton heifer, staggering and
swaying over the river sand towards him in their weakness
and agony of hunger and thirst The poor creatures
had seen the man and the horse! As they toiled
towards the light of the fire, a dreadful, wheezing
moan came from the parched throat of the leading steer
as it laboured pantingly over to something human something
it associated with water, and grass, and life, and
presently the wretched animal, with one last effort,
fell in its tracks almost at Harrington’s feet.
It lay there quiet enough for a minute or two, with
lean, outstretched neck and one horn buried in the
sand, its fast glazing eye turned to the man, and
seeming to say, “Give me water or death.”
Harrington, wrought up and excited
to the last pitch, flung himself upon his knees, and
placed his cheek against that of the dying steer, and
a sob burst from his bosom.
“O God, if there is a God! have
mercy upon these Thy dumb creatures who suffer such
agony.”
He stepped up to his horse, took his
revolver out of the pouch, and then a merciful bullet
ended the sufferings of the thirst-stricken animal
at his feet.
“Steady, Bob, old man!
Steady there!” he said brokenly, “I may
have to do the same to you before long.”
And then, tearing off a long piece of dried ti-tree
bark from one of the trees, he thrust it into the fire.
Then, with the blazing torch in his left hand, and
his pistol in his right, he tramped over the sand
to the remaining cattle, and shot them dead one by
one.
Then back to his digging again.
A drink of thick, muddy water for his horse, and then
with a dull sense of misery in his heart he led Bob
up the bank and began the last stage of his ride home home
to his anæmic, complaining, shallow-brained wife
and the weakly children who, instead of being the
consolation of his life in his misfortunes, were an
added and ever-present source of misery and despair.